© 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. word 2010 Chapter 4 Working with Tables and Graphics.

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© 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. word 2010 Chapter 4 Working with Tables and Graphics

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Word 2010 Working with Tables and Graphics Skill 4.1 Creating a Table Skill 4.2 Entering Data in a Table Skill 4.3 Inserting Rows, Columns, and CellsSkill 4.3 Inserting Rows, Columns, and Cells Skill 4.4 Sizing Tables, Columns, and RowsSkill 4.4 Sizing Tables, Columns, and Rows Skill 4.5 Merging and Splitting CellsSkill 4.5 Merging and Splitting Cells Skill 4.6 Aligning Text in Tables Skill 4.7 Sorting Data in Tables Skill 4.8 Adding Table Quick StylesSkill 4.8 Adding Table Quick Styles Skill 4.9 Adding Borders to a TableSkill 4.9 Adding Borders to a Table Skill 4.10 Inserting Clip Art Skill 4.11 Inserting a Picture Skill 4.12 Applying Quick Styles to PicturesSkill 4.12 Applying Quick Styles to Pictures Skill 4.13 Wrapping Text Around GraphicsSkill 4.13 Wrapping Text Around Graphics Skill 4.14 Resizing and Moving GraphicsSkill 4.14 Resizing and Moving Graphics Skill 4.15 Adding WordArt to DocumentsSkill 4.15 Adding WordArt to Documents Skill 4.16 Inserting SmartArt Skill 4.17 Inserting a Shape Skill 4.18 Adding a Caption 4-2

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. A table helps you organize information for effective display. Tables are organized by rows, which display horizontally, and columns, which display vertically. The intersection of a row and column is referred to as a cell. 4-3 Word Skill 4.1 Creating a Table

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 1.Click the Insert tab. 2.Click the Table button. 3.Select the number of cells you want by moving the cursor across and down the squares. 4.When the description at the top of the menu displays the number of rows and columns you want, click the mouse. 5.The table is inserted into your document. 4-4 To Create a Simple Table

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Once you have inserted a blank table, you will need to enter data. When entering data in a table, it is a good idea to use the first row as a heading row by typing a short description of the content for the column in each cell. After you have labeled each column, continue entering the data into your table. 4-5 Word Skill 4.2 Entering Data in a Table

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 1.Place the cursor in the cell where you want to enter the data. 2.Type the data just as you would in normal text. 3.Press the Tab key to move to the next cell and enter more data. 4.When you reach the last cell in the last row of a table, pressing on the keyboard will create a new row in the table. 5.Continue pressing the Tab key until all data are entered. 4-6 To Enter Data in a Table

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Once you have created a table, you often find you need more rows or columns. With Word, you can easily insert additional rows and columns from the Table Tools contextual tabs. When you place the cursor in a table, the Table Tools contextual tabs display. These tabs are called contextual tabs because they only display when a table is the active element. The Design tab contains tools to change the look of the table, such as shading and borders. The Layout tab contains tools to change how information is displayed in the table, such as row and column commands. 4-7 Word Skill 4.3 Inserting Rows, Columns, and Cells

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Insert a Row or Column 1.Click the Layout tab under Table Tools. 2.To insert a new row, click the Insert Above button or the Insert Below button. 3.To insert a new column, click the Insert Left button or the Insert Right button. Delete a Row or Column: 1.Click in the row or column you want to delete. 2.Click the Layout tab under Table Tools. 3.Click the Delete button and select an option. 4-8 To Insert or Delete a Row or Column

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. When you insert a table, it covers the full width of the page and the columns and rows are evenly spaced. Once you have entered your data, you will probably find that the table is larger than it needs to be and the columns and rows need adjusting. You can resize your table using Word’s AutoFit commands. 4-9 Word Skill 4.4 Sizing Tables, Columns, and Rows

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 1.Click in the table you want to resize. 2.Click the Layout tab under Table Tools. 3.In the Cell Size group, click the AutoFit button. 4.Select AutoFit Contents to resize the cell to fit the text of the table To Adjust the Width and Height of Cells using AutoFit

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Use the merge cells and split cells commands to customize the layout of tables. Merging cells entails combining multiple cells into one. –For instance, to display the title for a table in a single cell that spans all the columns of the table, merge the cells in the first row into one cell. Splitting a cell divides the cell into multiple cells. –For instance, to separate a cell containing multiple values, split the cell so it can display each value in a separate row or column Word Skill 4.5 Merging and Splitting Cells

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. To merge cells in a table: 1.Select the cells you want to merge into one. 2.Under Table Tools, click the Layout tab. 3.In the Merge group, click the Merge Cells button. To split a cell in a table: 1.Select the cell you want to split. 2.In the Merge group, click the Split Cells button. 3.In the Split Cells dialog box, enter the number of columns and rows. 4.Click OK to split the cell To Merge Cells or Split a Cell

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 1.Place the cursor in the row where you want to split the table. 2.In the Merge group, click the Split Table button To Split a Table into Two Tables

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. When entering data in tables, there will be times when you want to change the position of text within a particular cell. Examples of varying alignment include: –Most text in cells is left-aligned. –Titles and column headings are often center-aligned. –Most columns of numbers are right-aligned. You can control both the vertical and horizontal alignment in cells Word Skill 4.6 Aligning Text in Tables

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 1.Click the cell you want to change. 2.Under Table Tools, click the Layout tab. 3.In the Alignment group, click one of the nine alignment options To Change the Alignment of Cells

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Cell Alignment Options 4-16

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 1.Click the Cell Margins button in the Alignment group. 2.The Table Options dialog box opens. Here you can adjust the left, right, top, and bottom margins of cells To Manually Change the Size of Margins within Cells

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 1.Click the Text Direction button in the Alignment group on the Layout tab. The text rotates and is displayed vertically. 2.Click the button again to flip the text the other direction. 3.Click the button a third time to return the text to its original position To Change the Direction of Text in Table Cells

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 1.Click the Text Direction button in the Alignment group on the Layout tab. The text rotates and is displayed vertically. 2.Click the button again to flip the text the other direction. 3.Click the button a third time to return the text to its original position To Change the Direction of Text in Table Cells

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. After you have entered data in a table, you may decide it needs to be displayed in a different order. Sorting rearranges the rows in your table by the text in a column or columns. Word allows you to sort data based on the first character of each entry. You can sort in alphabetical or numeric order, in either ascending (A–Z) or descending (Z–A) order Word Skill 4.7 Sorting Data in Tables

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 1.Under Table Tools, click the Layout tab. 2.In the Data group, click the Sort button. 3.The Sort dialog box opens. 4.Click the Sort by arrow and select a field to sort by. 5.The Ascending: radio button is selected by default. 6.Click OK to sort the text in the table To Sort a Column Alphabetically

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Just as you can apply complex formatting to paragraphs using Quick Styles for text, you can apply complex formatting to tables using Quick Styles for tables. Using Quick Styles for tables, you can change the text color along with the borders and shading for a table, giving it a professional, sophisticated look without a lot of work Word Skill 4.8 Adding Table Quick Styles

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 1.Under Table Tools, click the Design tab. 2.In the Table Styles group, click the More button. 3.Select a Quick Style from the Quick Styles gallery To Apply a Quick Style to a Table

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 1.Under Table Tools, click the Design tab. 2.In the Table Styles group, click the More button and select New Table Style... 3.In the Create New Style from Formatting dialog box, you can create a new table style based on an existing table style, changing options such as grid lines and shading to suit your needs. 4.When you save the style, it will appear in the Table Styles gallery To Create Your Own Table Style

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. When you first create a table, it uses the simple datagrid style. You can apply a Quick Style to your table to quickly add formatting, but what if you want to further adjust the look of a table after applying the Quick Style? You can choose different shading for your table and add and remove borders to change the look of the entire table or just parts of the table Word Skill 4.9 Adding Borders to a Table

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 1.Select the table you want to change. 2.Under Table Tools, click the Design tab. 3.In the Table Styles group, click the arrow next to the Borders button. 4.On the menu that appears, all currently selected options appear active with a background color. Options that are not selected appear without a background color. 5.Click a border option to turn that border on or off in the table To Change the Borders for a Table

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 1.Select the table you want to change. 2.Under Table Tools, click the Design tab. 3.In the Table Styles group, click the arrow next to the Shading button. A palette of colors displays. 4.Select a color to change the background color for the table To Change the Shading or Background Color

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Word’s Clip Art feature allows you to easily insert clips into your document. These clips refer to media files from another source. They include images, photographs, scanned material, animations, sound, and video. By default, Word inserts these clips as embedded objects, meaning they become part of the new document (changing the source file will not change them in the new document). The Clip Art task pane allows you to search for different kinds of clips from many different sources Word Skill 4.10 Inserting Clip Art

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 1.Click the Insert tab. 2.In the Illustrations group, click the Clip Art button. 3.When the Clip Art task pane opens, type a word describing the clip you want in the Search for: box. 4.Click the Go button. 5.Click the clip you want to insert it into the document To Insert a Clip Art Image into a Document

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. You can insert images that you created in another program into your document. By default, Word inserts images as embedded objects, meaning they become part of the new document. Changing the source file will not change or affect the newly inserted image Word Skill 4.11 Inserting a Picture

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 1.Click the Insert tab. 2.In the Illustrations group, click the Picture button. 3.The Insert Picture dialog box opens. 4.Navigate to the file location, select the file, and click Insert To Insert an Image from a File

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Quick Styles are a combination of formatting that gives elements of your document a more polished, professional look without a lot of work. Quick Styles for pictures include a combination of borders, shadows, reflections, and picture shapes, such as rounded corners or skewed perspective. Instead of applying each of these formatting elements one at a time, you can apply a combination of elements at one time using a preset Quick Style Word Skill 4.12 Applying Quick Styles to Pictures

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 1.Select the picture you want to apply the Quick Style to. 2.Under Picture Tools, click the Format tab. 3.In the Picture Styles group, click the More button. 4.In the Picture Quick Styles gallery, click an option to apply it to the picture To Apply a Quick Style to a Picture

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. When you first add a graphic to your document, Word inserts the graphic at the insertion point and displays the graphic in line with the text. More often than not, you will want to place the graphic somewhere else on the page. Word comes with a number of preset image positions that include wrapping the text around the image Word Skill 4.13 Wrapping Text Around Graphics

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 1.Under Picture Tools, click the Format tab. 2.In the Arrange group, click the Position button. 3.In the With Text Wrapping section, select an option. 4.The image is placed on the page according to the option you chose. 1.Square 2.Tight 3.Behind Text 4.In Front of Text 5.Top and Bottom 6.Through 4-35 To Position the Image on a Page with Text Wrapping

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. If you have multiple images, you can layer the images and then arrange them using the Bring to Front button and Send to Back button in the Arrange group Layering Multiple Images

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. When you first add an image to a document, you may find it does not appear the way you expected. The image may be too large for the page or it may be in the wrong place on the page. You can change the layout of a document by resizing and moving images Word Skill 4.14 Resizing and Moving Graphics

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 1.Select the graphic you want to change. 2.To resize a graphic, click a resize handle and drag toward the center of the image to make it smaller or away from the center of the image to make it larger. 3.To move a graphic, rest your mouse over the graphic. When the cursor changes to the move cursor, click and drag the image to the new location To Resize and Move a Graphic

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Sometimes you’ll want to call attention to text you have added to your document. You could format the text by using character effects, or if you want the text to really stand out, use WordArt. WordArt Quick Styles are predefined graphic styles you can apply to text. These styles include a combination of color, fills, outlines, and effects Word Skill 4.15 Adding WordArt to Documents

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 1.Click the Insert tab on the Ribbon. 2.In the Text group, click the WordArt button and select a Quick Style from the gallery. 3.Replace the text “Your Text Here” with the text for your document To Add WordArt to a Document

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 1.Under Drawing Tools, click the Format tab. 2.In the WordArt Styles group, click the Text Effects button. 3.Point to Transform and select an option from the gallery To Transform WordArt

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. SmartArt is a way to take your ideas and make them visual. Where documents used to have plain bulleted and ordered lists, now they can have SmartArt, which are visual diagrams containing graphic elements with text boxes for you to enter your information in. Using SmartArt not only makes your document look better, but it helps convey the information in a more meaningful way Word Skill 4.16 Inserting SmartArt

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Categories of SmartArt List —Use to list items that do not need to be in a particular order. Process —Use to list items that do need to be in a particular order. Cycle —Use for a process that repeats over and over again. Hierarchy —Use to show branching, in either a decision tree or an organization chart. Relationship —Use to show relationships between items. Matrix —Use to show how an item fits into the whole. Pyramid —Use to illustrate how things relate to each other with the largest item being on the bottom and the smallest item being on the top. Picture —Use to show a series of pictures along with text in the diagram. 4-43

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 1.Click the Insert tab. 2.Click the SmartArt button. 3.In the Choose a SmartArt Graphic dialog box, click a SmartArt option and click OK. 4.The Smart Art is added to your document. 5.Click in the first item of the Text Pane and type your first item. 6.Enter the text for each item. 7.Click outside the SmartArt graphic to hide the Text To Add SmartArt to a Document

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. A shape is a drawing object that you can quickly add to your document. Word comes with a number of shapes for you to choose from including lines, block arrows, callouts, and basic shapes such as smiley faces, rectangles, and circles Word Skill 4.17 Inserting a Shape

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 1.Click the Insert tab. 2.In the Illustrations group, click the Shapes button and select an option from the Shapes gallery. 3.The cursor changes to a crosshair. 4.Click anywhere on the document to add the shape To Add a Shape to a Document

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. To resize a graphic: 1.Click a resize handle ( or ) 2.Drag toward the center of the image to make it smaller or away from the center of the image to make it larger. To rotate a graphic: 1.Click the rotate handle 2.Drag your mouse to the right to rotate the image clockwise or to the left to rotate the image counterclockwise. To move a graphic: 1.Point to the graphic. 2.When the cursor changes to the move cursor click and drag the image to the new location Working with a Shape

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 1.Right-click the shape. 2.Select Add Text. 3.A text area displays in the shape. 4.Type the text and click outside the shape To Add Text to A Shape

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. A caption is a brief description of an illustration, chart, equation, or table. Captions can appear above or below the image, and typically begin with a label followed by a number and the description of the image. Captions are helpful when referring to images within paragraphs of text. Word automatically numbers the figures in your document based on the label type. –For example, if you have several tables that use the “table” label, those captions will be numbered sequentially. –If you have other figures labeled as “figures,” those images will be numbered sequentially Word Skill 4.18 Adding a Caption

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 1.Select the figure you want to add the caption to. 2.Click the References tab. 3.In the Captions group, click the Insert Caption button. 4.The Caption dialog box opens. 5.Click the Label: arrow and select a figure type. 6.Click the Position: arrow and select where you want the caption to appear. 7.Type any additional text, such as a description of the figure, in the Caption: box. 8.Click OK to close the dialog box and add the caption To Add a Caption to a Figure

a skills approach © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Word 2010 Working with Tables and Graphics Recap Skill 4.1 Creating a Table Skill 4.2 Entering Data in a Table Skill 4.3 Inserting Rows, Columns, and CellsSkill 4.3 Inserting Rows, Columns, and Cells Skill 4.4 Sizing Tables, Columns, and RowsSkill 4.4 Sizing Tables, Columns, and Rows Skill 4.5 Merging and Splitting CellsSkill 4.5 Merging and Splitting Cells Skill 4.6 Aligning Text in Tables Skill 4.7 Sorting Data in Tables Skill 4.8 Adding Table Quick StylesSkill 4.8 Adding Table Quick Styles Skill 4.9 Adding Borders to a TableSkill 4.9 Adding Borders to a Table Skill 4.10 Inserting Clip Art Skill 4.11 Inserting a Picture Skill 4.12 Applying Quick Styles to PicturesSkill 4.12 Applying Quick Styles to Pictures Skill 4.13 Wrapping Text Around GraphicsSkill 4.13 Wrapping Text Around Graphics Skill 4.14 Resizing and Moving GraphicsSkill 4.14 Resizing and Moving Graphics Skill 4.15 Adding WordArt to DocumentsSkill 4.15 Adding WordArt to Documents Skill 4.16 Inserting SmartArt Skill 4.17 Inserting a Shape Skill 4.18 Adding a Caption 4-51